Sweet Harmony (Liquid song)

"Sweet Harmony" is a song by British dance act Liquid, originally released on the Liquid EP in 1991, and as a single in 1992. The song samples heavily from CeCe Rogers' "Someday" released in 1987.[1] New remixes of the song were released in 1995, and it was re-released in 2004 and again in 2007, featuring more new mixes.

"Sweet Harmony"
Single by Liquid
from the album Culture
Released1992 (original release)
1995 ('95 version)
2004 (2nd re-release)
2007 (3rd re-release)
GenreBreakbeat hardcore
Length4:22 (Original mix)
LabelXL Recordings
Songwriter(s)Model, Ame & Jefferson
Producer(s)Model & Ame

In the UK, the original 1992 version peaked at No. 15; the 1995 release at No. 14; and the 2004 release at No. 87.[2]

Danny Byrd version

"Sweet Harmony"
Single by Danny Byrd featuring Liquid
from the album Rave Digger
Released1 February 2010
Recorded2010
GenreDrum and bass
Length6:08
LabelHospital
Producer(s)Danny Byrd
Danny Byrd singles chronology
"Red Mist"
(2009)
"Sweet Harmony"
(2010)
"Ill Behaviour"
(2010)

English drum and bass DJ and producer Danny Byrd released his version in 2010. It was the first single released from his third album Rave Digger. The song was released on 1 February 2010 as a digital download and 12". It peaked at number 64 on the UK Singles Chart, making it his first chart entrance.

Track listing

12"[3] and digital download[4]
No.TitleLength
1."Sweet Harmony"6:08
2."Sweet Harmony" (Jungle Mix)5:18

Chart performance

"Sweet Harmony" managed to peak to number 64 on the UK Singles Chart and number 6 on the UK Dance Chart.

Chart (2010) Peak
position
UK Dance (Official Charts Company)[5] 6
UK Singles (Official Charts Company)[6] 64

Release history

Region Date Format Label
United Kingdom 1 February 2010 Digital download Hospital Records
12"
gollark: I don't think you can get cinema movies yourself very easily, and it's a bit of an odd reason to make the phone excessively tall or add a notch.
gollark: Also, what aspect ratio are movies? 1.87:1 corresponds to no common aspect ratio I know of.
gollark: Just... make the screen whatever size is needed, instead of "extending" the screen in a way which makes it worse at viewing *rectangular content*?
gollark: They're just uncool. Rectangular screens are practical and sensible. By cutting a bit out you're not really making the screen usefully bigger, since the bit around it isn't very usable.
gollark: Notches are the enemy. I just want a sensible rectangular LCD panel with maybe 1600 pixels of height.

References

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